Junior General

By The Associated Press

Friday, January 9, 2009 11:53 PM EST

LUBBOCK, Texas - The spotlight shines on Texas Tech's players, not the coach, when they are introduced after blaring hip-hop and rap music thunders through a darkened arena.
One of those starters wears his hair closer to his collar than he used to; another began the season with a mohawk. The Red Raiders are a lot different under Pat Knight than they were when his famous father stalked the sidelines with an old-school approach.

Bob Knight got his groove on with Frank Sinatra's “My Way” - the song they played at United Spirit Arena when he tallied win No. 880 to pass Dean Smith as the winningest coach in major college basketball.

Pat Knight can relate to his dad's favorite song, though. He's following a Hall of Fame coach who won 902 games and three national championships. As he approaches the one-year anniversary of taking over when his dad suddenly retired, Knight knows the only way to survive is by trying to carve his own legacy.

“That song just doesn't apply to him. It applies to me now,” Knight said. “Now it's my job. I have to do it my way, what fits my personality, what fits the talent I have and what I think can help this team win.”

So far that has meant a quicker offensive tempo and use of the zone defense sometimes for Texas Tech - more departures from the elder Knight, who surprised many last February by walking away from coaching after 6.5 seasons in West Texas. He started his 42-year career at Army, but spent most of it at Indiana, where he won all three NCAA titles.

Pat Knight, who was named head coach designate in 2005, inherited a 12-8 team from his father. The Red Raiders finished 16-15 and didn't get a postseason invite.

His first full season has been a wild ride.

Among the 10 wins Texas Tech took into its Big 12 opener Saturday at No. 23 Baylor was a 167-115 victory against East Central, the most points ever scored by the Red Raiders. The worst of five losses, though, was a 111-66 rout at Stanford that gave Pat Knight the three biggest defeats in school history after Texas Tech lost at Kansas by 58 and at Texas A&M by 44 last season.

None of those defeats robs him of sleep.

“I could have the five worst losses, I don't care,” he said. “To me it's the overall state of the program, what my overall record is going to be. That's what matters to me.”

His father's coaching knowledge also matters to him, and he taps into it regularly. Early this season he did the calling. Lately, his father has reached out to him.

After an 85-79 loss at Lamar in mid-December in which Texas Tech had repeatedly given up layups, father and son sat down for a powwow on defense.

With the Red Raiders at the bottom of the Big 12 in scoring defense (78 points per game), defense is the focus. The loss at Stanford spurred Knight to return to basics, running a two-hour defensive clinic for his players.

“This was the first time they asked questions,” he said. “If you don't understand something, you've got to ask a question. ... I think it opened a line of communication better for them, so I think it worked out pretty good.”

Knight has a flair for the unconventional like good friend Mike Leach, Texas Tech's pirate-loving football coach. He brought in Leach's defensive coordinator, Ruffin McNeill, to talk to his players about, well, defense.

And just last week Knight scanned the crowd during a home win over Stephen F. Austin and brought a young boy from the stands into the team huddle to make a point. The Red Raiders had missed more than a dozen layups, and their coach asked the youngster if he could make one.

After the boy said ‘yes,' Pat Knight turned to his players and told them if a 12-year-old could make layups, they had no excuses for missing theirs.

Players say they like the change in styles.

Alan Voskuil, the Red Raider with the longer hair, said there is a “little” more leniency under Pat Knight and that he feels more of a personal relationship with his former coach's son.

John Roberson, Tech's leading scorer at 15 points per game, illustrated the difference by starting the season with a low-key mohawk.

“Pat is always open for new things,” Voskuil said. Often “he'll come and ask us what we think needs to be changed.”

Pat Knight knows he will forever be compared to his father. He welcomes that.

“I'm more like him than I'm not,” he said. “If somebody comes up to me and says, ‘It reminds me of your dad,' that's the greatest compliment I can get. If they say, ‘Hey, that's a little different,' that's also a great compliment because you have to be your own person.”

The Citizens' Say

Post your comment - click here

There are No comments posted.

REGISTRATION IS FREE.
Registered users sign in here:
*Member ID:
*Password:
Remember login?
(requires cookies)
 
Unregistered users can register here:

Do not use usernames or passwords from your financial accounts!

Note: Fields marked with an asterisk (*) are required!

*Create a Member ID:
*Choose a password:
*Re-enter password:
*E-mail Address:
*Year of Birth:
 

(children under 13 cannot register)

First Name:
Last Name:
Company:
Home Phone:
Business Phone:
Address:
City:
State:
Zip Code:
 
E-Citizen
E-Edition
Wheels Etc.
Find a vehicle
Hot Jobs
Find a Job
Homes Etc.
Find a Home
TV Week
Find a program
Search Classifieds
Find, Buy
Place a Classified Ad
Sell
Skaneateles Journal
The Journal
New! Best Bridal
Here comes the bride. . .
Liven Up the Holidays
Fa-la-la-la-la-la-la-laaaaaa
Logo HereNew! Off the Menu
Good Eatin'!
Newspaper Ads
See it again
CNY Boats Etc.
Achors aweigh!
New! School Project
A breakdown of the new school project.
Sections
Special Sections

Top Jobs

The Citizen Copyright ©2009
A division of Lee Publications, Inc.
25 Dill Street
Auburn, NY 13021

Contact Us

Add to My Yahoo!